XiaNaphryz
LATIN, MATRIPEDICABUS, DO YOU SPEAK IT
The elite pitchers are the ones who have movement on the fastball. You get just a little bit of movement on a 95+ fastball and he's got ace potential.
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The elite pitchers are the ones who have movement on the fastball. You get just a little bit of movement on a 95+ fastball and he's got ace potential.
this is so fucking cool, anymore gifs like this?
Makes you appreciate Bartolo Colon's dinger even more, if that's even possible.
Bonds pitch recognition at his peak was otherworldly.
Bonds was pretty close one season...he may have actually done it if he actually got more balls in the strike zone instead of all those walks.
Bonds insane single season OBP is another number never getting touched.
Returning a tennis ball serve and saving a penalty kick is harder.
great video, and I love the breakdown.
What's cool about this is that most of the same science applies to backyard baseball or slow pitch softball, it's just the window for timing is much greater... And I'd wager most people in this thread have played either backyard baseball or slow pitch softball. So it's like there's this thing that is very, very difficult to do physically, yet we've all done it, and it seems like the most natural thing in the world..
I don't know about that. Consider that the world's greatest baseball players of the day fail at hitting a baseball 7/10 times, and the world's greatest tennis players of the day succeed at returning a serve 9/10 times (I might be wrong here, but just estimating -- does anybody have the ace percentage of high level tennis players?). A 90% success rate (Tennis) and a 30% success rate (baseball) by the greatest players in the sport seems to suggest that succeeding at hitting a baseball is more difficult than succeeding at returning a tennis serve.
Penalty shootouts are closer to hitting a baseball. In the world cup, penalty kicks score about 71% of the time, so an average goalie success rate of 29%. In baseball, the league batting average is .256 (25.6%).
We should see VR experiences soon that can simulate what it's like to face major league pitfching.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2MqtETMlgWk
batters can tell some pitches by glimpses of the seams on the ball heading toward them
Returning a tennis ball serve and saving a penalty kick is harder.
Wow, never thought of that. If accurate, this would be an absolute blast.
We should see VR experiences soon that can simulate what it's like to face major league pitching.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2MqtETMlgWk
I honestly never considered the possibilities.. Very exciting indeed. Would love to bat in VR.Yeah, there's a lot of awesome VR possibilities for sport related stuff.
We should see VR experiences soon that can simulate what it's like to face major league pitching.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2MqtETMlgWk
The batter is more or less predicting (guessing) what the pitcher will throw and swinging before he knows.
When the batter guesses wrong is when you see him swinging wildly through a chest-high fastball. When the batter guesses right is when he hits the same fastball into orbit.
Boozed up fathers can't berate their children at the little league field anymore.
Just wait till little Johnny gets home and dad forces him to wear the Occulus...
This is why I never really understood the debate about steroids in baseball. Yea, it will add 50 feet to your hit, but just hitting the god damn ball is the hard part. Why does whether or not a handful of guys hit 5-10 extra home runs a season going to break the entire game? You don't think when guys like Conseco or Maguire were mashing the ball there weren't literally HUNDREDS of minor leaguers juicing that nobody gave a crap about because they couldn't hit crap?
Lets put this in context; Barry Bonds. The guy was a career .298 hitter--which is pretty good considering the league average in those days was about .260-.270--and even before he started breaking records was regularly hitting 30-40 HR's a season. During the 90's his average was just over .300 a season, which is really good. Now you might be thinking "maybe more strength increases swing speed and made him hit better", but the funny thing is Bonds didn't start juicing until 1998. He had already had 3 MVP seasons, 8 Silver Slugger awards, 7 Golden Gloves, and 7 Allstar appearances.
The point I'm trying to make is, alright yea, Steroids helped Barry Bonds break the single season home run record. But he was already a future hall of famer, who was an amazing baseball player. There were probably thousands of players over that time frame in the MLB who get no notoriety because they just weren't very good compared to him. So personally, if he athletes want to get all jacked up on steroids to on average hit 5-10 more HR's that would just be fly outs, I say let them. If you can go out there and hit .300 or .320 a season, you're going to be successful no matter what. I mean shit, 41 year old Ichiro is batting like .410 right now--in the pitching dominant National League at that.
Hey guys, no "this sport is more <adjective> than this sport" BS or other such snide remarks.
Stop it.
Returning a tennis ball serve and saving a penalty kick is harder.
Aces happen roughly 30% of the time. Tennis is a terrible comparison. The ball bounces in front of the player before it's hit by the returner, giving up location and greatly reducing velocity. A tennis player needs only reach the general area with touch to return.
The difficulty in tennis comes from positioning and lateral movement. It's really amazing that you rarely hear of ACL injuries in tennis. Other leagues should take note.